Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: frustrating couple of
days
I believe the ground for the controller unit is made through
the DB15 wire harness to the EC2; by moving the A/B switch you will have
lengthened this ground loop ... maybe try a wire from Controller PCB common
to ground of remote A/B switch.
Is it possible for you to put the A/B
switch back to original position?
Jeff
-----Original
Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:
flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Ed
Anderson
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 2009 12:53 PM
To: Rotary motors in
aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: frustrating couple of days
Mike,
per discussion about possible de-bouncing problem. Might try
sticking
a 0.01 ufd capacitor from your Controller Switch to Ground -
just to
eliminate debouncing as the potential
problem.
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary
Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.comhttp://www.andersonee.comhttp://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.htmlhttp://www.flyrotary.com/http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BWhttp://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm-----Original
Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:
flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Mike
Wills
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 2009 12:09 PM
To: Rotary motors in
aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: frustrating couple of days
Minor
correction. Its not that I'm only seeing a problem with the B
controller.
Its that it appears that the problem occurs when I switch to B,
but in
the 2 cases where the staging point was corrupted, the corrupt data
was
on the A controller.
I've been all through the power and ground
system. Multiple times. When I
first noted the problem and emailed Tracy
about it he suspected ground
noise. After describing my electrical system
to him he made two suggestions:
1) I implemented a single point
ground even though I have a metal airframe.
I wanted to avoid ground
currents getting into the radio and intercom. Due
to CG issues my
batteries ended up in the baggage compartment so the ground
connection
from the batteries to the single point ground ended up being
about 8' of
#0 cable. Tracy recommended eliminating this cable and tying
the
battery ground terminals to chassis ground as close as possible
to the
batteries. I've done this.
2) My ignition coils were also
connected to the single point ground through
about 3' of #14 wire. Tracy
indicated that the coils are the greatest
potential noise makers on the
airplane and recommended grounding this to the
airframe or engine
block as close as possible to the coils. I've done this.
I've reviewed
all of my wiring to make sure that things that should be
shielded are and
to be sure that noisy wires are seperated from sensitive
ones. There were
no obvious problems found in my original install in this
regard, but I
did move a couple of wires to gain even more seperation.
So as I
said, I believe the power and ground system in the airplane are
sound. I
doubt that remoting the A/B switch, or something wrong with the
switch
itself, is what is causing this, but I do believe that something is
going
on in the act of switching from A to B that is causing the problem.
I'll
try to force it in my testing today.
Mike Wills
RV-4
N144MW
----- Original Message ----- From: "thomas walter" <
roundrocktom@yahoo.com>
To: "Rotary motors in
aircraft" <
flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Thursday, July
02, 2009 7:26 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: frustrating couple of
days
Ed,
Odd electrical trivia. Older eeproms
were rated at 3.3V, so below 2.7V
they ignored any read or write
information.
We had a uC that would start "jabbering" on the data and
clock lines when
power was caming up. Since reset occurred once
power was good, it was
never an issue. Problem is the eeprom
manufactures started shipping parts
that were functional from 1.8V to
3.3V. So once power was at 1.7V, it
accepted writes, corrupting the
eeprom. Just to drive the engineers crazy
only some lots and some devices
'jibbered' away. Yes, amazing I still have
any hair left.
:)
That is pretty rare, but has happened.
Yes, Mike --
Interesting you're only seeing an issue with the "B"
controller. Still
triple check the power, grounds, and rest of the
connections.
Since
the fuel map is stored in non-volute memory, it's hard to figure
out
how
it is being re-written or destroyed. Normally (as you know) access
to
EEPROM on a chip is a rather non-trivial process. Since the A and
B
controller are two different chips, I suppose there could be a
problem
with the B chip - but, while that does happen, it's pretty
rare. Have not
had one myself
(yet).
--
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